Dry September is a story where citizens of a Jefferson, Mississippi have heard a rumor that Will Mayes, a black man has raped a white woman named Minnie Cooper. The story explores the reactions of the town’s citizens as this rumor is spread. Individuals begin to make individual conclusions and assumptions drawing hasty ideas based on insufficient or miniscule evidence, even going as far as to make up some of the evidence to draw a conclusion. There is a relationship between racism and violence in the world of the text. There are many scenes of physical violence present in the text, both stated and implied. It begins with the aggression seen with McLendon upon his entry into the barber shop, building up to the crucial moment where they have taken Mayes, to the implied murder through the lack of description of what happened to Mayes, concluding with the domestic violence McLendon has with his passive and mothering wife. The action of killing Will Mayes has been omitted to keep our attention on the causes of the violence. This point of view is written in an observer’s field of perspective where the observer is all knowing of the circumstances and details of each scene. From the physical violent elements such as the stifling scene of the barber shop to the emotional violent elements of the characters, such as when McLendon says “Are you going to sit there and let a black son rape a white woman on the streets of Jefferson?”(Faulker 50) There is a cultural mentality that exists
Tom Dent’s Ritual Murder portrays the phenomenon of black urban crime on New Orleans, Louisiana. A friend kills a friend; Joe murdered James in the Negro bar on a Saturday night while both were drinking. Killing each other happens all the time in “our race on Saturday nights” (Dixon 474). Friends are the victims as well as the perpetrators. The murders and the victims in the play are friends that often murder one another, because “Friends kill each other all the time…unless you have an enemy you can both kill” (480).
Have you ever been too filled with hate and pride to see the obvious truth right in front of you? The year was 1935 in the small town of Maycomb Alabama. During this time an important trial would be taking place. The trial of Tom Robinson, an African and American who had been promptly accused of rape by the one man who had seen the incident. Bob Ewell a despised person throughout the community and the father of the victim, Mayella Ewell, Bob’s abused, lonely, unhappy daughter. Though one can pity Mayella because of her overbearing father, one cannot pardon her for her shameful indictment of Tom Robinson.
First, ask yourself how would you feel after hearing the news that one of your family members had been lynched? Throughout the chapters 1-8, we can experience and observe the disheartening history of violence and lies. It is additionally an irritating depiction of a partitioned country on the very edge of the social equality development and an eerie contemplation on race, history, and the battle for truth. Throughout history, the conditions of the lynching, how it affected the legislators of the day, quickened the social equality development and keeps on shadowing the Georgia people group where these homicides occurred. During the 1900s until 19600s various African-Americans experienced various harsh conditions of violence, never being granted the right to vote and being segregated from whites based on their race and skin-color from their white masters. In general racism between whites and blacks can be seen throughout the globe during the era of slavery
. . but specifics [to him] didn’t matter because the victims were now symbols of injustice: a NAACP cause” (78). Especially given the long-past, over-60-years-old nature of the lynching, Wexler’s goal, and therefore also her writing, must more profound, and compelling, than this, and therefore she, unlike White, is interested in the specifics: “Roger and Dorothy Malcolm, and George and Mae Murray [the lynching victims] . . . I have tried to bring them to life” (266). Wexler succeeds in that, rather than merely mentioning these victims in the context of the lynching, she includes detailed biographies of each, as well as of their relations, and describes their actions long before and immediately leading up to the lynching, in an attempt to give the reader a better understanding of and greater empathy for them.
This was not the only event that had occurred that day. Soon another tragedy struck the colored community. Virgil was on his way to the Birmingham Church when a he got a call calling him there as the novel states, “You need to get to Birmingham right away”(Lewis et al. 11; 5). On his way there Virgil was shot and killed by a young white man who was participating in a Klan Rally nearby. Virgil was 13 years old when he was murdered by two white teenagers that were active members of the Eagle Scouts and participants in a Klan rally. This shows that even white teenagers were taught to have a strong hate towards people of color. Not only is it a strong hate it has gotten to the paint that they are murdering people of color on sight without regard of who they are and what they are doing. Not long after this tragedy with Virgil, another Black teenager by the name of Johnny Robinson was shot and killed by a police officer
Milam drove over to Mose Wright’s home, where Emmett was staying. It was about 2:30 am when they had gone up to the house and demanded to see Emmett. Although Emmett was unsure of the violence that went on between races in Mississippi, his uncle knew. He allowed the two men without a fight, to see Emmett. He thought that they would just beat him and return him home. The men took Emmett to a place nearby, and into a shed. Nobody is positive of what the two men did to him that night, but there was a teen nearby, who did hear sounds coming from the shed. The witness, “Mr. Reed, an African American sharecropper, risked his life at 18 to appear as a surprise witness in the prosecution of the white men accused of the crime.”
Anne Moody had always heard about so many people shot dead floating down the river but she never really knew why. She overheard a little about Emmett Till's death as her and her friends were following behind a group of boy’s on their way home from school. She thought they were unusually quiet until they started shouting about a fourteen year old boy that got killed by white men because he whistled at her. Mrs. Burke also asked her about the boy and told her, “He was killed because he got out of his place with a white woman.” (1) She then went to her teacher Mrs. Rice for questions and found out about Emmett till’s case.
“A redcoat soldier raised his musket, leveled it at Father, and fired” (Fast 100). April Morning is written by Howard Fast and takes place on April 17th, 1775 at the start of the revolutionary war in Lexington, Massachusetts. Moses Cooper is a major character and also the antagonist to Adam because he and Adam are always fighting and Moses doesn’t let Adam grow up. Although Moses was hard to understand, he was an affectionate, opinionated and respected man.
In the book A Long Way Gone the children are being stripped of their childhood. They do not get to experience the carefree childhood that most children have. They deserve to be having fun with their families and and not be scared and alone while being dragged into the war. A quote from the book that really explains how the children are living a stressful childhood is “I was afraid to fall asleep, but staying awake also brought back painful memories.” These children should not be sleep deprived nor terrified to fall asleep, this will cause growing problems for the child. They will not have all the physical and mental growth they need in life especially if they constantly stressed. Another example of them not having a carefree childhood is they’re
The issues raised in Tannen’s article do support the different ways men and women use the web and communicate online. Fallows points out comparable details to those Tannen mentioned, for instance, how women communicate excessively by the web compared to men. Furthermore, how every day we apprehend each other more effectively. The 21st Century seems to be the best era to make these comparisons between the Millennials and Centennials.
Bitter Watters was a book over the author’s experiences under Stalin’s Soviet Union. Andreev-Khomiakov (the author) talks about his everyday life during the years of 1935 to 1941. From the point of being imprisoned in a labor camp in till he has to leave Moscow because of World War II. In the book Andreev-Khomiakov talks about how the Stalin system works daily, and expresses his own opinions about it. He explains how controlled he and his coworkers are by the Soviets. This primary source is helpful to feel what it was like under Stalin’s Soviet Union. After reading Bitter Watters, I have realized Stalin’s totalitarian was an actual thing. Using the words from Andreev-Khomiakov himself, you will see how Stalin’s regime was totalitarian. By giving a summary of a section and then dissecting it with facts will help explain the argument. That Stalin’s Soviet Union was a totalitarian run country during his rule. First we need to briefly go over the beginning of the book to understand the books direction.
Josephine Tey’s Daughter of Time is a story that gives the reader a role in being a detective, filling in Sherlock Holmes 's shoes but with a twist. Within the first few chapters we meet Alan Grant, a famous inspector from England 's Scotland Yard. He is confined in a hospital after sustaining an injury, leaving him immensely bored during his recovery there. Where he would trace and map out ceiling cracks for hours; after awhile he became acquainted with the nurses that would come in and out of his room. His actress friend Marta brings printed materials for Grant to read but he would reject them, the reason is not known. His antsy behavior shows that he craves a mental challenge. Grant eventually got what he wanted; Marta suggested that he should try solving an old mystery that no one has managed to solve. She brings him pictures, portraits of faces from different historical eras. During his recovery, he spends time analyzing the collection that Marta provides him. It’s clear that Grant adopts Carr’s and Elton’s methodology into solving this case and without either of them it wouldn’t be possible.
People that have helped Layton “see” that which he had not seen, “love” what he once considered unlovable, and “be” in an often imperfect world are his mother, Aunt Sue, his Grandmother, Uncle Jimmy, friends, people he encounters in his life, and famous black individuals. There are many that are found in the book.
Everyone needs to believe that things are going to get better, particularly when facing challenging or troubling times. Our world is fraught with sadness, misfortune, and adversity, and the world constructed by Ray Bradbury in “All Summer in a Day” is no different. Unending rain, gray skies, and endless dark doldrums beneath the surface of Venus plague the lives of the young children in his short story. And yet, every night when they go to sleep, the young protagonists hope for more. Despite being surrounded by a gray plague of ceaseless rain, the children dream of the sun. In “All Summer in a Day,” Bradbury uses the sun throughout the text to symbolize hope.
I take a couple of steps forward, wandering closer to where the woman sits on the ground. The sound of my footfalls on the gravel-strewn rock cause the woman to slowly open her eyes. She fixes her blue-green eyes on me, but her face shows no emotion whatsoever. She stares at me for a few moments before finally averting her